My idea of a kill switch is a switch on the handle bars that instantly turns the vehicle off in case something goes wrong (stuck throttle, stuck carb slides, shorted throttle or controller, bike laying on it's side with a WOT stuck in the dirt). Can a contactor be used for that?
If I had a regular switch near the battery and motor, I wouldn't need a contactor? I'm assuming that my ezip doesn't have one. It seems to have a toggle switch inline between the battery and the controller. I guess I don't see the reason for having a contactor instead of a toggle type switch on a bike except for using a kill type switch on the handle bars. I could see the point of having a on/off switch remotely controlled in a car where you would be sitting a long ways away from the battery and motor. I'm not trying to argue or anything, I'm just trying to see if I undertand this correctly. I was recommended to get a "72 volt contactor, or a 12 volt would work if you have 12 volts on board for the lights. best one is the Tyco lev 72 volt , at $140."
Does that mean that regardless of how many volts I am running, I can run a 12 volt contactor if I have a 12v system running?